Albuquerque Journal

Playoff minus ’Bama? It’s very possible

- BY RALPH D. RUSSO ASSOCIATED PRESS

Thoughts, takedowns and takeaways from the 13th week of the season. 1. A College Football Playoff without Alabama? Very possible, even likely. At 11-1 and with no chance to win a conference championsh­ip after losing to No. 6 Auburn , Alabama is going to need help to make it four straight playoff appearance­s.

2. The Tide always does well with the eye test, but the résumé is light compared with what Ohio State did to reach the playoff without playing in its conference title game last season. Those Buckeyes reached selection Sunday with three wins against top-10 teams, two on the road. Alabama’s best victories will be against LSU and Mississipp­i State.

3. The SEC champion is in. The ACC champion is likely in, even with Miami’s loss at Pitt. Oklahoma is in if it wins the Big 12. Unbeaten Wisconsin seems like a lock with a Big Ten title. There would be no room for the Tide.

4. What does Alabama need to happen? No. 8 Ohio State (10-2) beating No. 5 Wisconsin in the Big Ten championsh­ip game probably is a good place to start. No. 10 TCU (10-2) beating Oklahoma could work, too.

5. It could be an interestin­g test for the selection committee, seeing how comfortabl­e it is having two teams from one conference in the final four. The selections could also provide insight about how much the committee simply defaults to the digit in the loss column and what is the value of a conference championsh­ip.

6. The winner of the Iron Bowl might have been Georgia. The Tide and Tigers pounded

each other, and Auburn running back Kerryon Johnson left the game early with what coach Gus Malzahn said was “a shoulder issue.”

7. The Bulldogs easily took care of business against Georgia Tech and will show up at MercedesBe­nz Stadium the fresher team, looking to avenge its only loss of the season.

8. The most impressive thing about Auburn’s second victory in three weeks against the team holding the CFP No. 1 ranking: The Tigers clearly outplayed the Tide, a rarity in the Nick Saban era.

9. So far the Jim Harbaugh era at Michigan has been far more interestin­g in the offseason than it has from September to January.

10. Harbaugh is now 0-3 against Ohio State, and surely there are Wolverines fans losing patience. Though probably just some. The program is in far better shape than it has been since the 1990s.

11. Michigan’s 8-4 record this season is not shocking but still pretty empty, with no victories against winning teams. Next season, Harbaugh returns a mountain of talent and it will be on him to develop Brandon Peters or Dylan McCaffrey into a top-tier quarterbac­k. No more excuses.

12. Ohio State coach Urban Meyer is 27-3 in rivalry games, dating to when he went 1-1 coaching Bowling Green against Toledo. It’s an impressive number in a Hall of Fame career and speaks to how well Meyer taps into the emotions of his players.

13. While it is understand­able Meyer would be upset about his quarterbac­k getting hurt on a crowded sideline during pregame warm up, the coach’s reaction to J.T. Barrett’s injury seemed a bit melodramat­ic.

14. Baker Mayfield’s punishment for being a knucklehea­d last week against Kansas turned out to be two plays. That’s how long it took the Sooners to score on their first possession against West Virginia. Mayfield then took over and went 14 of 17 for 281 yards and three touchdowns. The Heisman Trophy is still all his, barring some sort of five-intercepti­on meltdown in the Big 12 title game this week.

15. Stanford’s Bryce Love, battling through a sore ankle, went for 125 yards and a touchdown against No. 9 Notre Dame and Washington helped the Cardinal win the Pac-12 North by beating Washington State. Love gets another big stage against USC in the Pac-12 title game, but it looks like Stanford will have to settle for having the Heisman runner-up for the fifth time since 2009.

16. It was a little weird to hear Nebraska athletic director Bill Moos say he would consider UCF coach and former Cornhusker­s quarterbac­k Scott Frost , whose teams is unbeaten, among the candidates to replace Mike Riley. Athletic directors almost never name names, but it is so obvious Nebraska would be interested in Frost there is no reason to hide it.

17. Texas Tech’s Kliff Kingsbury seemed to save his job on Friday night by beating Texas. Arizona State’s Todd Graham did not, despite winning the Territoria­l Cup against Arizona .

18. Big difference between those two situations: Tech has always wanted Kingsbury to succeed at his alma mater and seemed willing to cut him extra slack. Arizona State seemed to be looking for a reason to move on from Graham.

19. On Saturday, Florida fans watched their Gators (4-7) lose to Florida State for the fifth straight year and found out Chip Kelly was definitely not going to be their next coach. That’s a bad day.

20. There will be no 5-7 bowl teams this season. There could be as many as 82 teams with six wins and only 78 spots.

 ?? BRYNN ANDERSON/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Auburn defensive back Javaris Davis, left, and Tray Matthews, right, sandwich Alabama wide receiver Calvin Ridley during Saturday’s Iron Bowl, won 26-14 by the Tigers.
BRYNN ANDERSON/ASSOCIATED PRESS Auburn defensive back Javaris Davis, left, and Tray Matthews, right, sandwich Alabama wide receiver Calvin Ridley during Saturday’s Iron Bowl, won 26-14 by the Tigers.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States